The riflewill fire the cartridge but it may not cycle the action (eject the spent brass, recock the striker, load the next round). The quiet .22 ammunition may not have sufficient power to operate the rifle.
Due to the current lack of availability, you best shoot whatever you can find. Beyond that, CCI and Wolf make fine ammunition.
Need to have the chamber throat inspected by a gunsmith. sales@countrygunsmith.net
The Marlin model 780 (1985-1988) .22LR is worth in the region of $150-$200 depending on the condition. I own one myself they are a great small caliber rifle capable of good cleen, long distance kills up to around 100 yards using the right ammunition. i would recomend CCI Stingers or Velocitors they are a High Quality, Hyper Velocity Round.
CCI is the manufacturer. Cascade Cartridges, Inc.
Is windows is a CCI Operating System
The acronym CCI in CCI Edits could stand for 201 in Roman numerals. CCI Legal is also a commercial debt collection company in the UK. Another meaning to CCI could be the name of an association of Christian organisations involved in holiday camps, retreats and residential holidays in the UK.
The "-cci" in Italian is pronounced as "ch-ee", with the "ch" sound similar to the "k" in the English word "kick". An example is the word "cappucci" pronounced as "cah-poo-chee".
CCI
you must use cci hypervelosity long rifle ammo. this will result in jam free ops. That would be a no on the Hyper ammo. Marlin specifically states in the manual NOT to use Hyper Velocity ammo in their semi-auto rifles. It's fine for the bolt action and lever action rimfires, but not in the semi-auto. The semi-auto Marlin rifles were designed to shoot High Velocity only and using Hyper can damage them. There are a lot of reasons a Marlin or any other rimfire rifle might "jam", but we'll need a lot more information on the particular problem. Jamming could be anything from a failure to feed, extract, eject, stove piping or other problem. We just need more information. If you really need help on your Marlin 60, surf over to Rimfire Central's Marlin forums. A lot of great advice and they/we should be able to keep your 60 running smooth. There's also a lot of information on upgrades available for your 60 if you decide to make some changes. For the record, my personal Model 60 doesn't jam and it has 10,000+ rounds through it since 2005. They're great little rifles if they're running as they should.
In Roman Numerals, C is 100 and I is 1 so CCI would be 100+100+1 or 201.
People who are interested in buying CCI Primers would generally be people who are interested in guns and ammunition, since Primers are part of a gun that fires the actual projectile. CCI is also a famous gun manufacturing company. It follows that it is mainly people interested in Guns would buy CCI Primers.
Exclusively government carriers use CCI edits - this statement is true.